95 Me. 115 | Me. | 1901
Tbe plaintiff recovered a verdict fox,- tbe damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of injuries to bis horse, carriage and harness resulting from a collision between bis team and one of tbe electric cars of the defendant company at tbe intei’section of Broadway and Cumberland streets in Bangor.
Tbe case comes to the law court on tbe defendant’s motion to have the verdict set aside as against tbe evidence.
The accident happened on tbe twenty-first day of November, 1899, about twenty minutes before seven o’clock in tbe evening. Tbe plaintiff was driving into tbe city down Broadway with bis horse harnessed to a “Bangor” top-buggy. Tbe electric car was running up Cumberland street on schedule time on its regular trip
The motor-man in charge of the ear testifies that he was not aware of the approach of the team until it was within twelve or fifteen feet of the place of collision, and that he then applied the brake and used every exertion to stop the car in season to prevent a collision but was unable to do so.
The plaintiff thereupon contends, as the principal ground of defendant’s liability, tbat the motor-man was guilty of negligence in not exercising greater vigilance to discover an approaching team and in not employing more effective measures to stop the car in season to avoid the accident; and he introduces evidence tending to show that immediately before the collision the motor-man was engaged in frivolous conversation with a passenger, and that others
The testimony is conflicting in regard to the rate of speed at which the plaintiff was driving. He testifies that he was “jogging along at the rate of four or five miles an hour,” while the defendant’s witnesses say the horse was coming so rapidly that they thought it was a runaway team. But it was not in controversy that he drove along to the crossing without slackening his speed, whatever it was, and without stopping to look or to listen, and without looking or listening for an approaching car.
True, the established rule respecting steam railroads, that it is negligence per se for a person to cross the track without first looking and listening for a coming train, is not deemed wholly applicable when crossing the tracks of a street railway company in a public street where the cars do not enjoy the exclusive right of way. In other words, it cannot be declared as a matter of law that it is the absolute duty of a traveler to look and listen for an approaching car before crossing the tracks of a street railway. Kelly v. Wakefield and S. St. Railway Co., 175 Mass. 331, (S. C. N. East. Rep. 285) ; Robbins v. Springfield Street Railway, 165 Mass. 30; Hall v. West End St. Railway Co., 168 Mass. 461. But the reasons for the rule applied to steam railways may, under some circumstances, be applicable to the crossing of a street railway. It may be determined, as a matter of fact, that the exercise of ordinary care and prudence would require a traveler in some situations to look and listen before crossing the tracks of a street railway. In the recent decision of Kelly v. Wakefield & St. Ry. Co., supra, a case presenting striking analogies to the case at bar, it was found by the law court as a matter of fact that the plaintiff, who was approaching a street railroad track obscured by a dense growth of trees for a portion of the distance to the place of crossing, was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look and listen for cars on reaching the crossing, although he had previously looked from a
In the case at bar the plaintiff was driving in a closed carriage on a dark night. He was familiar with the street railway crossing at Broadway; he “knew of the car and the track.” He must have known that according to the schedule a car would leave West Market Square at 6.30 P. M. on a regular trip to Old Town; and he must have known approximately the rate of speed at which it was usually run over Cumberland street, and about what time it would be likely to cross Broadway. He knew of the massive hedges that intercepted his line of vision down Cumberland street until he arrived “within a few feet” of the northerly line of that street. If he had stopped and listened before he reached the point which commanded a view of the approaching car, he could not have failed to hear the hum of the machinery or the rumble of the car. If he had stopped to look and listen after he reached the line of vision, or had looked without stopping, he must have seen the brilliant headlight and the lighted monitor of the approaching car. His own carriage was not provided with lights, and his team was not likely to be seen or beard by the motor-man until its approach near the track. In this situation the plaintiff was not relieved by anything, in the conduct of the motor-man, of the plain duty to use his own senses of sight and hearing when they were so manifestly available to him. He was required to do for his own safety and protection what ordinarily careful persons are accustomed to do under like circumstances. The exercise of ordinary care and prudence required him to look and listen for the approaching car before attempting to cross the track. His failure to do so was the result of his own thoughtless inattention, and must be regarded as negligence on his part.
Nor does it appear from the evidence that the consequences of the plaintiff’s negligence, in this respect, could have been avoided by the use of any ordinary care on the part of the motor-man. The fact that the team may have been discovered by a passenger a second before it was seen by the motor-man by no means proves a failure of duty on the part of the latter. He had just received a signal-bell to stop for a passenger to alight at Broadway and for
The plaintiff’s own negligence must, therefore, be deemed the proximate cause of the accident.
Motion sustained.